| The San Francisco Rose |
Yesterday
was positively Proustian. Sitting in the
corner of the living room bay window in the late afternoon, sipping a cup of rose
tea, its fragrance like Proust’s Madeleine, I had a remembrance of things past: the story of the San Francisco Rose.
| The Iceberg Climber |
I know
exactly when my love affair with roses began. We had just signed a contract to buy a
singularly unattractive fixer-upper Victorian in San Francisco. The only thing nice about that house was a
rose bush in the postage-stamp front garden. The rose was well established in its bed but
was barely winning a turf war with the ubiquitous upstart calla lilies that
were closing in. The rose caught my attention.
| The San Francisco Rose and the Iceberg Climber |
After
the broker left with our offer, I cut an open blossom from the bush and brought
it home to Oakland. The rose sat in a
small glass vase on the white dining room table. Directly above was a pendant lamp made of three
equal-sized glass disks, each 24 inches or so in diameter, sandwiched together one on top of the other,
and which held in place three cone-shaped halogen fixtures, the insides of
which were painted blue violet. It was
gorgeous and we called it the Flying Saucer. (I regret that I have no photo of this lamp,
nor can I find it on the Internet.) The halogens
cast three searchlight beams that dramatically illuminated the deep red velvety
petals of the rose before me.
| Souvenir de la Malmaison |
I bent
forward to, as they say, smell the roses.
I was overcome by the scent. It
wasn’t like anything I’d ever experienced before. It was heady, overpowering, a lemon bomb, and yes,
intoxicating. I can still see that rose
in that vase under that Flying Saucer lamp to this day, 28 years later. Through
its mysterious flower language, the rose talked me down from my panic over
having just bought a real dump. It gently persuaded me to reconsider our choice
in a different light, think things through more clearly, take a moment, chill
out. I did. I decided it was all good. I recalled the three cardinal rules of any
real estate transaction: Location,
location, location. And this bastardized
Victorian, which would require a small fortune and years to restore, had a very
good location. The neighborhood was rock
solid. So solid, that a few years after
we moved, Zuckerberg bought at the other end of the street.
| Variegata da Bologna |
So, we
owe the San Francisco Rose a serious debt of gratitude. And to show our appreciation for the
appreciation, before we moved, we dug it up, got export/import papers for it
from the USDA, and brought the San Francisco Rose with us to Italy. It’s been quite happy as an ex-pat transplant
there, where it keeps company with an Iceberg
climber, a Souvenir de la Malmaison,
a Variegata da Bologna, and a Cardinal de Richelieu, all of which you
see on this page. But it’s the San
Francisco Rose that takes First Prize in our hearts. It continues to bloom profusely, having lost
none of its powers of fragrant persuasion.
| Bouquet of all of the above, with Cardinal de Richelieu |
Keep it
real!
Marilyn
So many reasons to love flowers, right?
ReplyDeleteMyriad!
DeleteLove these big, floppy, fragrant roses. I've grown a few and they are addictive. Nice to be reminded.
ReplyDeleteYes, they're lovely even as they lose their blooms. I save the petals.
Delete